Port Weller Daily reports 2015

May 1, 2015

John B with Bob Highcock and Jean Hampson.

Bugs a nuisance but they have been worse.

Few migrants: 1 House Wren, 1 Brown Thrasher, 1 Yellow Warbler, 3 Yellow-rumped Warblers and 1 White-throated Sparrow. Last year on May 1 we observed 2 Phoebes, 20 Ruby-crowned Kinglets, 8 House Wrens, 3 Brown Thrashers, 2 Warbling Vireos, 5 Yellow-rumped Warblers, 20 White-throated Sparrows and 1 Rufous-sided Towhee.

A group of about 70 immature male Red-winged Blackbirds travelled along the pier with us and we may have seen them leave the vicinity of the Coast Guard station at 0910 hours heading south.

Alas there are dog ticks on the pier. Bob had one tick in the central area on the way out. I had 3 and Jean had 2 on the way back along the path on the west side of the pier.

John B

May 2, 2015

Bob Highcock and Jean Hampson.

A beautiful sunny morning for a bird count.

Bugs a slight nuisance in areas.

Few migrants: 1 House Wren, 1 Brown Thrasher, 2 Ruby-crowned Kinglets,3 Yellow Warblers, 2 Yellow-rumped Warblers, 1 Palm Warbler, 1 Eastern Towhee, 1 Savannah Sparrowand 3 White-throated Sparrows. See attached for complete list.

Looking for a place to have breakfast after your count. Try The Diner House 29 on the north-east corner of Welland and Grantham Avenues.The banana foster French toast was delicious!

Bob & Jean

May 3, 2015

Bob Highcock and Jean Hampson.

Another beautiful sunny morning.

Some migrants:2 House Wrens, 1 Gray Catbird, 1 Brown Thrasher, 1 Hermit Thrush, 1 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher,4 Yellow Warblers, 2 Yellow-rumped Warblers, 2 Palm Warblers, 1 Pine Warblerand5 White-throated Sparrows. See attached for complete list.

One coyote observed on the west pier and a second observed running along Bunting Road north of Scott Street on our way home.

Bob and Jean

May 4
Very quiet.A few Yellow-rumps and a lot of Yellow Warblers. Very noisy perhaps 100 or more Grackles and Red winged Blackbirds at the start of the trail. Smaller groups of grackles and blackbirds all along the pier.
Midges abundant and 1 tick in the central area.
A Northern Harrier female flew west across the canal and then over the west pier near the north end.
A single Catbird was heard on the way back to the Coast Guard station and a Brown Thrasher was seen at the side of the road.
The Coast Guard tell me the midges were so thick last night that the start of the road we census was not visible from the Coast Guard station.
John B

May 5, 2015
Philip and I spent about 45 minutes. Not much variety. At least 46 Yellow-rumps (too many to count exactly) , Baltimore Oriole, Black-throated Blue Warbler and Field Sparrow were new for the week.
Two small groups of 4-5 Bluejays passed overhead heading north.Hundreds of Red-winged Blackbirds feeding on the newly opened buds on the willows.Smaller numbers of starlings and grackles.
John B

May 6
Cold (less than 10 degrees Celsius) . No ticks. We almost needed gloves. Midges much reduced from yesterday. Few migrants once again.Less than 100 blackbirds this morning although they are still around and feeding on buds (but not on the canal side willows today.)One adult Black-crowned Night Heron in the willows.Only Yellow and Yellow-rumped Warblers. The Yellow-rumped Warblers , which were almost entirely adult males on May 4, are now almost entirely females.
This morning I had a brief look at what looked like the usual brown
swallow at the Coast Guard boat exhaust port. It was with a regular
plumaged bird.

John B

May 7

Great morning,
Dan Salisbury Luc Fazio and I had an excellent visit to the pier. On arrival we observed a Great-horned Owl fly north pursued by grackles and it was seen subsequently several times.
Two Fish Crows were seen and heard. A Forster's Tern flew by the mouth of the canal. There were not many migrants. We observed a Palm Warbler, Northern Waterthrush, Common Yellowthroat, Yellow and Yellow-rumped Warblers. A single Red-headed Woodpecker flew south near the north end. Numbers of Grackles and Red-wings were substantially down from a few days ago. Just south of the Coast Guard Station we observed a male Scarlet Tanager.
The real excitement came as we were walking along the west side of the pier on our way back to the Coast Guard Station. Dan heard and then spotted a Yellow-throated Warbler. Great looks at this bird, a first for me in Niagara! I put it on ontbirds (SEE BELOW)with directions to Malcomson Woods where this bird could show up in the next few days. For those of you who are counting in the next few days, if you take the walk back along the west pier then look for a Happy Birthday Balloon tied to a tree. This marks the area where it was seen and heard. Learn the song of the Yellow-throated before you go. Alternatively, look for it in Malcomson Woods.
"At about 0900 hours this morning Luc Fazio and Dan Salisbury and I observed a singing Yellow-throated Warbler on the Port Weller west pier
north of the Coast Guard Station. This area is not open to the public but we were there to do a special count. It is our experience, however,
that birds that first show up on the West Pier will often end up in Malcomson Woods."
John B

May 8

A good, but not great day at both Malcolmson and PWW. No rarities. First kingbirds, Tennessee warblers and redstart, and a tree decorated with 3 male grosbeaks. No ticks! Few midges.

Katherine

May 9

It was a beautiful day, but no rarities.Great-horned Owl.Great egret flyby and dead red-throated loon (can we count that? On west trail, first seen May 1).First hummer. Hopefully better tomorrow.

Katherine

May 10

It was a lovely warm day, but no fallout.First pewee and red eyed vireos.5 Northern Parula!

11 species of warbler.

Katherine

May 11

Important Note: The many warblers seen by Jean and Kayo had clearly not made it to Malcomson when Katherine Stoltz was there at 0700-0800!!

Good morning all
Jean Hampson and I had an excellent morning on the PWW pier count this morning. The middle grassy path (especially the middle third) was clearly the most active. We had 12 warbler spp highlighted by a stunning Canada, 5 male Black and White (first for the count this year of this species of concern), and a Northern Waterthrush singing on a branch found by Jean.
After the count was totalled, on the way out we observed a nice Veery along the main path.
Kayo

Hi Kayo

Looks like you were busy.
Some amazing numbers. 26 Magnolia Warblers and 12 Chesntut sided Warblers.
John

John....the Magnolia numbers might be low....the birds were everywhere. Might even say the same thing for Chestnut-sided, one tree held 4 birds. We had a fair bit of fog this morning....that would hold the birds down.

Kayo

May 12, 2015

Very windy, partially cloudy, seasonal temperature.

John Stevens

Hi John B

I have not seen a report on todays count as yet....I was wondering how many Magnolia’s and Chestnut-sided were seen this morning at PWWP. Do you have a report from John?

I subscribe to GeneseeBirds and today there were 3 reports to the listserv from US birders about the fog they encountered yesterday morning, and two of the three mentioned the unbelievable numbers of Magnolia and Chestnut-sided they observed yesterday.

After my 8:30 optometrist appointment this morning I spent about an hour at Malcolmson.A fair number of birds....mostly Yellow-rumped. I suspect the the next two or three days should produce a substantial number of birds.

BTW....I saw the dark coloured Northern Rough-winged Swallow on Monday. It sure looked chocolate brown all over even this early in its migration north. While there the bird did not enter the exhaust hole. I was not able to photograph it but I would bet it is a true dark morph bird.

Kayo

May 13

Overcast, cold and windy to begin, everyone wearing gloves but moderating as we moved along and even seeing some sun eventually.Two Dunlin were trying to get something out of the concrete near the end of the pier. On the return walk we had a couple each of Swainson’s Thrush and Great Crested Flycatcher with single Lincoln’s Sparrow, Northern Parula and Canada Warbler.About six Blackburnian Warbler seen along the road where none were found going out.

John S

May 14

Greetings,
Dan and I had an uneventful walk out to the end of the pier this morning. Not many warblers. Two Willow/Alder Flycatchers observed. One Canada Warbler.
We did have a Red-throated Loon fly by on our way back along the western side of the pier.
A coast guard person told us they had seen a female Coyote with a very young cub so keep your eyes open for this animal and avoid it.
We had a very close look at the black Bank Swallow building a nest in the coast guard boat exhaust. Dan suggests, based on his experience with other oiled birds , that this is an oiled bird. There is evidence of preening on the chest and the overall appearance is somewhat oily and shiny. The coast guard person we talked to said the nest was flushed out the other day. This is the third year of a bird trying to build a nest in the exhaust port! Possibly it is the same bird. At times there are a pair of birds sitting by the port but the normally plumaged one has not been seen entering the exhaust port. If you do see a white fronted bird (or two different black fronted birds) entering the exhaust it would be very interesting.
John B

May 15

It was a cool, gray day, rendering visibility poor.13 sp. of warbler including Cape May. Fly by of 2 great blue herons and a pack of 23 blue jays. On the way back, had field sparrow, white-throat and red-eyed vireo. The grass has been mowed, so easier to navigate the central and west paths.

Katherine

May 16 2015

Bob Highcock and Jean Hampson.An overcast and cool morning but we observed a variety of birds.13 species of warbler: Black and white, Tennessee, Yellow, Magnolia, Yellow-rumped, Black-throated Blue, Blackburnian, Chestnut-sided, Bay-breasted, Palm, Wilson's, American Redstart, and Northern Parula.

Other notables included, Eastern Kingbird, Great Crested Flycatcher,Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Indigo Bunting and White-crowned Sparrow.

Returning along the lake side of the pier we observed a Common Yellowthroat, 2 Black-throated Green Warblers and we heard a Blackpoll Warbler.

Bob & Jean

May 17, 2015

Bob Highcock, Jean Hampson and Kayo Roy

Jean, Kayo and I explored the pier this morning. A beautiful day but somewhat quieter than Saturday.

9 species of warbler: Yellow, Magnolia, Cape May, Yellow-rumped, Blackburnian, Blackpoll, Canada, American Redstart, and Northern Parula.

Other notables included, Eastern Kingbird, Great Crested Flycatcher, Least Flycatcher and Swainson'sThrush.2 Empidonax were observed and noted as Alder/Willow Flycatcher.

Returning to the coast guard station along the canal we all had a good look at a Philadelphia Vireo. We also observed 2 Brown Thrashers and a White-crowned Sparrow.

Bob & Jean

May 18

Hi folks

Good day at Weller today with 14 species of warblers.3 Long-tailed Ducks.

Marci

May 19

Hi folks

Very slow day at Weller today. Sadly 6 Blackpolls.

Marcie

May 20

Hi folks

Wednesday was a fairly good day at Port Weller with 11 species of warblers, including a young female Cape May. The birds were actually singing.

May 21

Hi folks

Thursday was very quiet. We did find Gray Catbird and Warbling Vireo nests. Also a Brown Thrasher on the way back from the tip.

Marcie

May 22

We bravely fought through choking clouds of midges to find a measly 4 species of warbler. Still scads of yellow warblers and an unidentified pile of black feathers on the west trail on the way out. Someone ate well.

Katherine

May 23

Despite dodging the Rankin Run set-up crew, we made it safely out of Midge Woods. No surprises. A few shorebirds at the tip (3 Dunlin, 2 Semipalmated and 1 Sanderling) picking up microscopic food particles.

Katherine

May 24

Much better than yesterday with the highlights being Osprey and Red-headed Woodpecker off the tip, a late palm warbler and mama coyote. We received a scolding from the killdeer who must have a nest in the grass near the tip.

Katherine

May 25

Very light wind to begin with the sun trying to appear after a cloudy night and very warm. Second warbler species was a Mourning before we’d even reached the fork of the trail.Lots of birds with many females and younger males. Judy and I may have had a Prothonotary; brilliant yellow head, dark eye, bluish-grey to the wings, unstreaked yellow belly but neither of us noticed white under the tail. Nevertheless we still had 16 warbler species and heard a Tennessee on the way back too. Midges galore, mosquitoes and ticks with insufficient flycatchers to deal with them

John S

May 26

A warm, pleasant day with light winds but with far fewer birds than yesterday. A Yellow-rumped Warbler was found on the return. Judy found a small Snapping Turtle where the two trails merge near the north end. It was a long way from water and looked pretty dusty.

John S

May 27

Another warm morning, moderately windy and partially sunny.Adult coyote seen in the distance. A quiet day on the warbler front, only four species although a Common Yellowthroat was heard on the return walk.

John S

May 28

Cooler and with a fresh westerly wind but that didn’t deter the midges which were out in force.The only relief coming at the north end of the pier. A large flock of small shorebirds was seen skimming low over the water heading west.

John S

May 29

For the antepenultimate day of the antepenultimate year of this study, it was a beautiful day for a walk on the pier; bright sunshine, low wind, seasonal temperature and almost midge free until right near the north end. There were so many birds that Katherine’s pen ran dry half way through. Well, maybe it was almost dry to begin. After yesterday’s bugfest, I wouldn’t have cared if I never birded here again but today restored my enthusiasm.(From Saturday May 30 :Did John Stevens mention that we saw the sooty swallow (who is a female) mating on Friday?

Katherine)

John S

May 30

A nice warm and sunny morning....only problem was that we ran into a mosquito convention.

Nothing special found....a Black-crowned Night-Heron along the shoreline at the start, the coyote let us see his presence and a Killdeer nest near the tip.

On the way home I stopped at Parmalat/Avondale ponds and found and photographed a Cattle Egret.

Kayo

May 31

Good morning all

Well it sure was not a good morning at PW. Rain and strong winds greeted Brian and I. As we entered past the electronic gate we saw that all the swallows were feeding near the gate and no higher than 10 feet from the ground. Along the road were many small branch limbs due to the strong winds from the east and not one cormorant was high in the trees....a few were at water level branches with most of them in the water. As we headed out the winds were stronger especially near the tip.

No mosquitos, no midges and virtually no birds not even swallows due to no insects....all other birds must have been well hunkered down or deeper west of the main road and secondary path.

Here attached is the miniscule total.

On the way out we had a great visual of an adult Black-crowned Night-Heron and an Eastern Kingbird. We also checked out Parmalat/Avondale ponds for the Cattle Egret....it was not seen.

Kayo